The article deals with the role of innovative technologies and different approaches to teaching substantivized adjectives to B2 level learners.
Keywords: innovation, development, demonstration, communicative activity, education, learning foreign languages
Our article is devoted to different approaches to teaching the substantivized adjectives to B2 level learners on the basis of the typologically relevant data of the two languages in their subsystems of the Adjectives.
Although the substantivized adjectives have been investigated separately in the two languages, namely, English and Uzbek, the comparative analysis of the substantivized adjectives which is useful to work out effective strategies for teaching them to B2 level learners has not yet been conducted.
The substantivized adjective is a very controversial but interesting linguistic phenomenon in both English and Uzbek. The adjective, being one of the notional parts of speech, expresses the quality, quantity, degree, state or a kind of other feature that nouns or other nominal parts of speech usually possess, whereas the substantivized adjectives incorporate the features of only the nouns.
Here we have pushed off from the following definition worked out by us: A substantivized adjective is a sometime adjective (of a simple or derivative, or composite structure) which has become nominalized acquiring (all) the features of the nouns. The process of substantivization is a universal phenomenon and considered to be a productive means of word-building, word-composition and even a word-coinage, thus enriching the vocabulary of any language.
Depending on all those factors we have introduced the notions and terms of a:
1) substantivized adjective of the singularia tantum (always have a singular form);
2) substantivized adjective of the pluralia tantum (always have a plural form) in Modern English. What concerns Uzbek it has all the substantivized adjectives that can have both singular and plural forms. These are the most relevant typological features of the compared languages which really might cause interlanguage interference. Such features are to be dealt with in teaching English (or Uzbek), for they cause some typical mistakes in constructing sentences and operating with them.
Structurally in the compared languages we have distinguished the following types of the substantivized adjectives: simple; derivative; composite (of compound and complex types); mixed types of substantivized adjectives. Adjectives having all the features of nouns are traditionally referred to as “fully substantivized adjectives”, “wholly substantivized adjectives”, “nouns formed by conversion or just nouns”.
In our view the most appropriate term for such adjectives is “fully substantivized adjectives”. So, adjectives like lunatic, relative, conservative, native have acquired all the morphological features of the nouns.
There is also another big group of the substantivized adjectives that do not bear all the features of nouns; thus, they are called partially substantivized adjectives.Here by “partially” we don’t mean that they are not fully substantivized, they really are, but we mean that they can’t demonstrate all the features of the nouns in their functions.
If we have revealed the isomorphic and allomorphic features of the substantivized adjectives in Modern English and Uzbek, that is, we have discovered the typological data of the substantivized adjectives in the two compared languages for creating an effective methodology of teaching the English substantivized adjectives to B2 level learners. Our findings have indicated that the adjectives and the substantivized adjectives in Modern English and Uzbek bear certain similarities and dissimilarities both structurally and semantically.
The following features of the substantivized adjectives aretypical of both the English and the Uzbek languages (they are the isomorphic features): The adjectives are substantivized; structurally, there are simple, derivative and composite types of the substantivized adjectives; semantically, there are monosemantic and polysemantic types of the substantivized adjectives; the use of the substantivized adjectives as nouns is at times quite frequent because of the communicative needs; interestingly enough, the suffix “–ish” is exactly the same both in form and meaning in the two compared languages (Blue — bluish; ko’k — ko’kish, etc).
The features of the English substantivized adjectives uncharacteristic of the Uzbek substantivized adjectives (they are the allomorphic features); there are the following types of the English substantivized adjectives: Substantivized adjectives of the singularia tantum proper and improper, and the substantivized adjectives of the pluralia tantum proper and improper; some English substantivized adjectives derived from participles(the expected, the unseen, the injured, etc) are considered to be substantivized adjectives in English whereas in Uzbek they are still regarded as substantivized participles (kutilgan(lar), jarohatlangan(lar), o’qigan(lar, va hk.), although we are more inclined to think that any participle in any language is only then substantivized, when it can function as a subject or an object or even a predicative and take plural ending “- lar”; some names of the nationalities which became substantivized have only some of the features of the noun, i. e. they are partially substantivized (Chinese, Vietnamese) in English, whereas in Uzbek, such adjectives are fully substantivized (Xitoylikar, Vetnamliklar); in English the names of the nationalities, though expressed by the substantivized adjectives or not, are always capitalized.
Departing from the knowledge we have obtained from the various methodical and methodological research on teaching grammatical phenomena, we have created an effective strategy fully based on communicative approach to teaching in general and English in particular which presupposes the extensive use of interactive methods and modern technologies and advanced means of teaching the language.
The strategy offered here is the one that presupposes the use of advanced methods and procedures in accordance with the requirements of the world standards of teaching English as an international language, which strictly demands that such methods as interactive ones, requiring all kinds of effective ways of teaching, including individual work, pair work, group work, team work, clusters, etc.
The whole procedure of applying the strategy worked out by us to the process of teaching the English substantivized adjectives to B2 level learners is based on the three main phases of any teaching, that is pre-activities (brainstorming, warm-up, lead-in, etc), while/during activities (presentation, acquisition or mastering of the material under study) and post activities (consolidation of the covered material by applying communicative approach) with a permanent focus on the substantivized adjectives. The strategy under use is experimented through a system of exercises (language, conditional speech and speech exercises) that mutually complete one another in comprehensive learning of the grammatical material for purely communicative purposes.
We hope that the strategy we have created in our article may tend to be useful assets for working out effective methods and methodologies for teaching certain other grammatical topics.
References:
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- Barhudarov L. S., Shteling D. A. A Grammar of English. — Moscow, “Vysshaya Shkola”: 1973. — 419 p.
- Brown G. The Grammar of English Grammars. — Project Gutenberg’s: 2004. — 1456 p.